Iran Arrests Rights Lawyer After She Attended Funeral for Girl Injured in Mysterious Metro Incident 

Mourners are seen at Armita Geravanad's funeral on Sunday. (KhabarOnline)
Mourners are seen at Armita Geravanad's funeral on Sunday. (KhabarOnline)
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Iran Arrests Rights Lawyer After She Attended Funeral for Girl Injured in Mysterious Metro Incident 

Mourners are seen at Armita Geravanad's funeral on Sunday. (KhabarOnline)
Mourners are seen at Armita Geravanad's funeral on Sunday. (KhabarOnline)

Iranian authorities arrested a leading human rights lawyer Sunday after she attended the funeral of a teenage girl who died after being injured weeks ago in a mysterious incident on Tehran’s Metro.

The report by the semiofficial Fars news agency, which is close to the country's security forces, said authorities detained Nasrin Sotoudeh on a charge of violating Iran's mandatory headscarf, or hijab, law.

Many other Iranian news outlets republished the report and said there were multiple arrests at the funeral of Armita Geravanad, who also was not wearing a headscarf at the time she was injured.

On Saturday, the 60-year-old Sotoudeh — known for defending activists, opposition politicians and women in Iran prosecuted for removing their headscarves — called the death of Geravand “another state murder.”

The funeral took place Sunday morning.

Geravand was injured and in a coma for weeks in Tehran. Her death came after the one-year anniversary of the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in the custody of Iran's morality police. She, too, was detained for not wearing a headscarf. Her death sparked nationwide protests at the time.

It's not clear what happened in the few seconds after Geravand entered the train on Oct. 1. A friend told Iranian state television that Geravand hit her head on the station’s platform. However, soundless video footage taken from outside of a nearby car is blocked by a bystander. Just seconds later, her limp body is carried off.

Iranian state TV’s report, however, did not include any footage from inside the train itself and offered no explanation on why it hadn’t been released. Most train cars on the Tehran Metro have multiple CCTV cameras, which are viewable by security personnel.

Geravand’s parents appeared in state media footage saying a blood pressure issue, a fall or perhaps both contributed to their daughter’s injury.

Activists abroad suspect Geravand may have been pushed or attacked for not wearing the hijab. They have demanded an independent investigation by the United Nations’ fact-finding mission on Iran, citing the theocracy’s use of pressure on victims’ families and state TV’s history of airing hundreds of coerced confessions.

Sotoudeh was previously arrested in 2018 on charges of collusion and propaganda against Iran’s rulers and eventually was sentenced to 38 years in prison and 148 lashes. She was released in 2020 but details about the conditions of her release were not announced. Sotoudeh occasionally visited clinics as she suffered chronic gastrointestinal and foot problems.



Israel’s Rightist Government Celebrates as Trump Claims Victory

A billboard shows a slogan in support of Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump, on the day of 2024 US presidential election, in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 5, 2024. (Reuters)
A billboard shows a slogan in support of Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump, on the day of 2024 US presidential election, in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 5, 2024. (Reuters)
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Israel’s Rightist Government Celebrates as Trump Claims Victory

A billboard shows a slogan in support of Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump, on the day of 2024 US presidential election, in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 5, 2024. (Reuters)
A billboard shows a slogan in support of Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump, on the day of 2024 US presidential election, in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 5, 2024. (Reuters)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his supporters celebrated the prospect of Donald Trump returning to the White House next year, hailing what a leader of the settler movement called an ally who would support them "unconditionally".

Congratulating Trump, Netanyahu said the former president was set for "history's greatest comeback".

"Your historic return to the White House offers a new beginning for America and a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between Israel and America," he said in a statement, which was echoed by the leaders of the hard-right nationalist religious parties in his coalition.

The Palestinian armed group Hamas, which has been fighting Israel for more than a year in Gaza, said the election was a matter for the American people, but it called for an end to the "blind support" for Israel from the United States.

"We urge Trump to learn from (President Joe) Biden's mistakes," Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters.

The outcome is a relief for Netanyahu's coalition, which has clashed with Biden's Democratic administration over the conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon that have fueled protests worldwide and left Israel increasingly isolated internationally.

The first Trump administration delivered major wins to Netanyahu, when it went against most of the world in recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital and accepting Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

Israel's settler leaders also welcomed the election results after Biden's administration imposed sanctions and asset freezes on settler groups and individuals involved in violence against Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

"We expect to have an ally standing unconditionally beside us as we fight the battles that are a war on the entire West," Israel Ganz, chairman of the main Yesha settler council, said in a statement to Reuters.

Underscoring the tensions, around 10 rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Wednesday targeting locations including the coastal city of Tel Aviv with no injuries, the Israeli military said.

Television footage showed part of a rocket that appeared to have been shot down by air defense systems smashing a car in the Israeli city of Raanana, close to Tel Aviv.

Nearly two thirds of Israelis believe Trump would be better for Israel than his Democratic Party rival Kamala Harris, according to a survey from the Israel Democracy Institute.

"I think it's good for Israel," said Jerusalem resident Nissim Attias. "He proved the last time he was the president, he moved the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and everything that he said, he did."